Towel Snapping the Press: Bush's Journey from Locker-Room Antics to Message Control: Communication, Media, and Politics
Autor James E. Mueller Cuvânt înainte de Marvin Olaskyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 25 mai 2006
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780742538511
ISBN-10: 0742538516
Pagini: 235
Dimensiuni: 148 x 226 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Seria Communication, Media, and Politics
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0742538516
Pagini: 235
Dimensiuni: 148 x 226 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Seria Communication, Media, and Politics
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 1. Friends for a Long Time
Chapter 3 2. Not His Father's (Or Grandfather's) Press Relations
Chapter 4 3. Message Discipline Before It Was Cool
Chapter 5 4. Plugging Leaks
Chapter 6 5. The Dark Side
Chapter 7 6. The Plain Talk of Bushisms
Chapter 8 7. Towel Snapping
Chapter 9 8. Shaving the Ear Hair
Chapter 10 9. Eating the Zombies
Chapter 11 10. No One Will Do It Better
Chapter 12 Bibliography
Chapter 2 1. Friends for a Long Time
Chapter 3 2. Not His Father's (Or Grandfather's) Press Relations
Chapter 4 3. Message Discipline Before It Was Cool
Chapter 5 4. Plugging Leaks
Chapter 6 5. The Dark Side
Chapter 7 6. The Plain Talk of Bushisms
Chapter 8 7. Towel Snapping
Chapter 9 8. Shaving the Ear Hair
Chapter 10 9. Eating the Zombies
Chapter 11 10. No One Will Do It Better
Chapter 12 Bibliography
Recenzii
Towel Snapping the Press is an informative book that's also fun to read. That's because Jim Mueller interviewed 29 journalists, recorded their often-amusing anecdotes, and then put present practice into historical perspective. What comes out is a dual portrait of the president and the press.
Mueller's account of the press-presidency relationship during the Bush years is an engaging and informative read. It benefits from the author's work both as a longtime practicing journalist and now as a scholar of political communications. He deftly combines interviews with contemporary journalists with a review and analysis of scholarly works. Some of Mueller's conclusions and suggestions for change will rankle journalists mired to the paradigm of 'objective' reporting. But that is a good thing because such a discussion is crucial to the future of political journalism.
As a photojournalist, I have photographed and traveled with George W. Bush and his staff since 1999. Jim has done an amazing and extremely accurate job in examining and defining the Bush administration's success with message management and press control. He also writes a candid inside look at Bush's early years as a businessman and part owner of the Texas Rangers that provides the prequel to understanding why Bush has succeeded when the odds are against him. This book will prove to be essential reading for understanding what has now become a new era in political press management.
A lively saga of the evolution of how George W. Bush learned to interact with the news media. . . . One of the most entertaining aspects of the book is the countless stories of Bush interacting with members of the news media. Recommended.
Forty years in the sports media business, dealt personally with the big names who have come through North Texas, and nobody, not Tom Landry, Tex Schramm, Jerry Jones, Jimmy Johnson, Mark Cuban, Don Nelson, Dick Motta, etc., could out-glad hand, or out-mad, George W. when it came to what you wrote or said. George W. has a gift in this area, mainly because I think once you remove all the 'political handlers' he ain't a bad guy at all. The George W. we once knew as the Rangers' owner was a totally different cat-open, honest, funny, friendly, combative-than what we now often see from the White House. Mueller's Towel Snapping the Press tells that story, and a lot of stories from all media angles, good and bad.
Mueller's account of the press-presidency relationship during the Bush years is an engaging and informative read. It benefits from the author's work both as a longtime practicing journalist and now as a scholar of political communications. He deftly combines interviews with contemporary journalists with a review and analysis of scholarly works. Some of Mueller's conclusions and suggestions for change will rankle journalists mired to the paradigm of 'objective' reporting. But that is a good thing because such a discussion is crucial to the future of political journalism.
As a photojournalist, I have photographed and traveled with George W. Bush and his staff since 1999. Jim has done an amazing and extremely accurate job in examining and defining the Bush administration's success with message management and press control. He also writes a candid inside look at Bush's early years as a businessman and part owner of the Texas Rangers that provides the prequel to understanding why Bush has succeeded when the odds are against him. This book will prove to be essential reading for understanding what has now become a new era in political press management.
A lively saga of the evolution of how George W. Bush learned to interact with the news media. . . . One of the most entertaining aspects of the book is the countless stories of Bush interacting with members of the news media. Recommended.
Forty years in the sports media business, dealt personally with the big names who have come through North Texas, and nobody, not Tom Landry, Tex Schramm, Jerry Jones, Jimmy Johnson, Mark Cuban, Don Nelson, Dick Motta, etc., could out-glad hand, or out-mad, George W. when it came to what you wrote or said. George W. has a gift in this area, mainly because I think once you remove all the 'political handlers' he ain't a bad guy at all. The George W. we once knew as the Rangers' owner was a totally different cat-open, honest, funny, friendly, combative-than what we now often see from the White House. Mueller's Towel Snapping the Press tells that story, and a lot of stories from all media angles, good and bad.